GEOFF Toovey says there’s no reason for his Manly side to fear that the window for another NRL premiership tilt may be closing.

Coach Toovey says the Sea Eagles’ mantra of consistency, which won them competitions in 2008 and 2011 and got them within minutes of grand final glory last year, will work again even though some core players are ageing and front row stocks have been decimated.

“We’ve got a great group of players and as you saw last year we were probably unlucky not to win the big one and it was a quality Roosters side that got the money.

“What got us through last year was our consistency. We stayed consistent throughout the year, even the games we lost were close.

“If you compete at that level every week then you’re a good chance of finishing up towards the top of the table.

“We’ve got several good quality leaders in our team and they take on the relevant load throughout the year and lead the team in the right direction, particularly under pressure.”

The Sea Eagles are hopeful co-captain King will be fit to start the season, but the worry is whether he can go the distance over 26 rounds given he’s missed the majority of the last two and a half years with injury.

There was a point last season where it was feared King’s career could be over due to the ongoing complications with his shoulder.

Even though the Sea Eagles have continued to be dominant without King, getting him on the park shapes as a key ingredient, given props Brent Kite, George Rose, Joe Galuvao and Richie Fa’aoso have all departed.

Brenton Lawrence, who enjoyed a breakout 2013 season, will be relied upon to lead the way, and the Sea Eagles will be hoping unheralded purchases Dunamis Lui and Josh Starling can be the next big men to step up at Brookvale.

According to Toovey, his other representative stars, led by Brett Stewart, are as fit as they’ve been in a number of seasons.

“(Brett’s) still got several years left here at Manly and he’s been training more and training better this year than he has in the past,” Toovey said, after his fullback last year battled knee problems.

“I think he’ll have a really successful year.

“Glenn has trained the house down this pre-season so we can expect a pretty big season from him and Anthony Watmough has shaken (knee injury) off and he’s training well as well.”

Manly will this year try to secure Cherry-Evans to a long-term deal, which won’t be easy given the obvious attention he’s likely to receive from rival clubs.

Toovey said the combination of Cherry-Evans and Kiwi international Foran would be crucial.

GEOFF Toovey says there’s no reason for his Manly side to fear that the window for another NRL premiership tilt may be closing.

Coach Toovey says the Sea Eagles’ mantra of consistency, which won them competitions in 2008 and 2011 and got them within minutes of grand final glory last year, will work again even though some core players are ageing and front row stocks have been decimated.

it must be a pre-requisite that every story on manly must contain the following sentence(or something similar):
"Manly will this year try to secure Cherry-Evans to a long-term deal, which won’t be easy given the obvious attention he’s likely to receive from rival clubs."

it must be a pre-requisite that every story on manly must contain the following sentence(or something similar):
"Manly will this year try to secure Cherry-Evans to a long-term deal, which won’t be easy given the obvious attention he’s likely to receive from rival clubs."

This is a very clever reverse psychology strategy by 2V. :idea: Whilst on the surface it appears fairly innocuous, by stating the obvious, 'that
MWSE' are not too old', it is actually planting the seed of doubt or a notion about Manly's ageing roster in the minds of our opponents.

Just by mentioning the idea it draws attention to it. The media, will think 2V is trying to compensate, or cover up this widely held view.
Of course, journos, players , all sorts will form the view that Manly 'ARE TOO OLD' and once again . . . . .

we'll be under the radar, written off, too old, too young, too slow, too whatever. Just what we want. :idea: